Thursday, October 9, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, October 9, 2014

11,820 names…11,820 stories…11,820 memories
This Day in Goodlove History, October 8, 2014

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Jeffery Lee Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com

Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove

The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany, Russia, Czech etc.), and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), Jefferson, LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, and including ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren, Teddy Roosevelt, U.S. Grant, Benjamin Harrison “The Signer”, Benjamin Harrison, Jimmy Carter, Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, William Taft, John Tyler (10th President), James Polk (11th President)Zachary Taylor, and Abraham Lincoln.

The Goodlove Family History Website:

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/index.html

The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! http://wwwfamilytreedna.com/public/goodlove/default.aspx

• • Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.

• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004.

WILLIAM B. Crawford (2nd cousin 6x removed)

Ronald Johnson (husband of the 1st cousin 1x removed)

Cindi S. Kruse (3rd cousin)

Henry C. LeClere (great grandfather)

Heather M. Topham (stepdaughter of the 1st cousin)



October 9th, 1558: - Mérida is founded in Venezuela. [1]



October 9, 1565: Mary, attended by the Earls of Huntly and Bothwell, puts herself at the head of ten thousand men assembled at Biggar, and marches towards Dumfries. The rebels, overpowered before they could collect their forces, take refuge in England with the Earl of Bedford, who had advanced as far as Carlisle to support them in case of success.



As Elizabeth had engaged to protect them, they sent Murray and the Abbot of Kilwinning to London, to entreat her assistance ; but the French and Spanish ambassadors openly accusing the Queen of Eng-

land of having fomented all these troubles in Scotland, she affected to receive Murray and the Abbot of Kilwinning with disdain, and even compelled them to declare publicly that she had neither supported nor

encouraged them. [2]



October 9, 1566: The Queen and the Lords of the Council go to Jedburgh to hold a court of justice. [3]



October 9?, 1569: The Abbot of Dunfermline, who had come to London on the part of Murray, conveys to Elizabeth evidence of the schemes that were on foot in favour of Mary. The queen immediately causes the

Duke of Norfolk to be cited before the council, and the Earls of Arundel and Pembroke, Lord Lumley, and Sir Nicholas Throckmorton, to be arrested at Windsor. The Duke of Norfolk, relying upon the assurances of Cecil, who had induced him to submit to the orders of Elizabeth, speedily returns to London, in spite of the urgent dissuasions of his friends, and the French ambassador. [4]

October 9, 1572: Killigrew wrote to Leicester and Burleigh that the regent was no longer very averse to the idea of consenting to the proposals w^hich had been made to him, and that the only question with him was, how they should proceed in bringing about the death of Mary. [5]



October 9, 1604: The last Supernova to occur in our solar system was in 1604.[6] “Die stelle nova.”



October 9, 1635: Colonial American Separatist Roger Williams was banished from Massachusetts for preaching that civil government had no right to interfere in religious affairs. (Williams was seeking to estaqblish freedom of worship through the separation of church and state.)[7]

October 9, 1710

On October 9, 1710, Andrew1 Harrison, Senior, of Essex County, conveyed to his son Andrew2 Harrison, land whereon the said Andrew1 Harrison, Senior, lived, containing 130 acres in Essex County, purchased of John Prosser, on the south side of the Rappahannock River, in the freshes thereof; the said Andrew1 Harrison, Senior, & Elinor, his wife, to live on the said land during their lives.[8]



On October 9, 1710, Andrew1 Harrison, Senior, conveyed to his son, Andrew2 Harrison, Junior, 200 acres, part of 400 acres proportionable part of a patent granted to the said Andrew1 Harrison, Senior, Richard Long & Samuel Elliot; being forest and on the south side of Rappahannock River, bounded by land of my son William2 Harrison, John Buckner, Richard Buckner, Larkin Chew & Richard Long. [Robert Torrence, Torrence and Allied Families (Philadelphia: Wickersham Press, 1938), 316; Essex County, Virginia Records, Deed Book No. 13 (1707-1711): 365][9]



October 9, 1710

3. Andrew Harrison, ~‘r,2 (Andrew ‘), is clearly traceable through the records of Essex, Spotsylvania and Orange Counties. “On October 9, 1710, Andrew Harrison, Senior; of Essex County, conveyed to his son Andrew Harrison, land whereon the said Andrew Harrison, Senior, lived, containing 130 acres in Essex County, purchased of John Prosser, on the south side of the Rappahannock River, in the freshes thereof; the said Andrew Harrison, Senior, & Elinor, his wife, to live on the said land, during their lives. Witnesses to this deed were James Harrison and William Williams. Y “On October 9, 1710, Andrew Harrison, Senior, conveyed to his son, Andrew Harrison, Junior, 200 acres, part of 400 acres proportionable part of a patent granted to the said Andrew Harri­son, Senior, Richard Long & Samuel Elliot; being forest land on the south side of Rappahannock River, bounded by land of my son William Harrison, John Buckner, Richard Buckner, Larkin Chew & Richard Long. Witnesses: James Harrison and William Williams.” [10]

1711: Plague breaks out in Austria. [11]

The First George Cutlip: 1711

George Cutlip1683 was born 1711 in Switzerland1683, and died 1780 in Augusta, VA1683, 1683. He married Christina Gotlieb.[12]

George {Gotlieb-Gotlip} Cutlip was born in 1711 in Germany (perhaps Saxe-Gotha) OR Switzerland. He died before 1780 in Augusta Co., VA. George immigrated on October 17, 1749 to Charleston, SC. He served in the military as a Sergeant in the PA Militia (Major James Burd's Co., First Regiment of Foot) March 3, 1756 - May 2, 1757 in the French & Indian Wars. [13]
DOCUMENTATION ...................

If the German George Cutlip presented here was not our first ancestor, those who propose an English background will have to produce an English George very much like this German George. According to his military record our George was born in 1711 and 38 years later decided to move to the New World and to chase the American Dream.[14]



Gottlieb sounds like Cutlip: As my father has told me since I was a young boy, “Gottlieb, said by a German, sounds like Cutlip”, to an English speaking person. I imagine the same would hold true for Gottlop.



In the 17th and 18th centuries, followers of the German Pietist movement believed that people should have a close personal relationship with God. Some gave they children names like Gotthelf "God, help!" or Gottlob "Praise God" or Furchtegott "Fear God." Furchtegott is a translation of the Greek name Timothy which also means "fear of God". It would have been around this time that the older name "Gottleib" began to be reinterpreted to mean "love of God" rather than "heir of God." As a name meaning "God Love" it was equivalent to the Latin "Amadeus" which means "love God." Christians focusing on biblical Greek will often cite three Greek words for love: Eros (romantic love), Philia (love between friends) and Agape (spiritual love). Agape is rarely used in names or words, but Philia often is, e.g. Philadelphia (the city of brotherly love), Anglophile (someone with a love of English things), Philosophy (love of knowledge) and the name "Theophilos" (someone haveing a friendly love for God). So, yes, it means "friend of God" but the word it uses is a particular type of love.[15]



1711 : Johann Andreas Eisenmenger writes his ‘Entdecktes Judenthum’ (“Judaism Unmasked”), a work denouncing Judaism and which had a formative influence on modern antisemitic polemics.[16]



1711

Indian School at William & Mary. "There was also a common school for Indian boys. The master received forty or fifty pounds sterling, which was to be paid from the rents of the Brafferton estate, in Yorkshire, in which the funds left by the Hon. Robert Boyle “for pious and charitable uses” had been invested by decree of the High Court of Chancery in Great Britain. The attendance on this school was augmented by boys from the town, whom the master was authorized to charge 20s. a year each. “Reading, writing, and vulgar arithmetic” were the subjects embraced."

(1711) A letter from Governor Spottswood to Lord Dartmouth in 1711 indicates that there were 25 Indian children at the College. He states “These Indians express much satisfaction at the treatment that is given their children. They often grieve that they were not so fortunate as to have had such advantages in their younger days. Based on several histories, the Indians had an entirely different view as many were coerced to attend. (1713) A report states that “Virginia demanded and received two hostages from each tributary Indian village. Governor Spotswood though that this was the best way to keep these Amerindians peaceful, while giving some of the most talented of their numbers an English style education. By 1713 there were seventeen of these students being educated by the College of William and Mary. [17]

1711–1715 – The Tuscarora War, in which the Cherokee participated with other tribes against their long-time Tuscarora enemies as allies of the Province of South Carolina. The remaining Tuscarora, an Iroquoian-speaking people, migrated north to New York, where they had joined the Iroquois as the Sixth Nation by 1722.[18]

October 9, 1715

The MacKinnons have been throughout the majority of their history a small clan with a strong sense of honor, even to a fault as as evidenced with their conviction to the Jacobite cause in 1715 and 1745 after which they were dispossed of their lands. [19]

In 1715 Ian dubh the chief of MacKinnon (grandson of Lachlan Mhore, his father Ian having died vita parentis,) was summoned by the Lord Advocate in the Hanoverian interest, to appear at Edinburgh, under the pain of a year's imprisonment, to give bail for his allegiance to George I. and the government. He rushed immediately into insurrection for the Stuart cause, and gathering one hundred and fifty of his clan joined MacKenzie Earl of Seaforth, in time to fight side by side with his neighbor MacDonald of Sleat, at the battle of Sheriffmuir , September, 1715, an obstinate engagement which the Jacobites claimed as a victory.[20]



On October 9th of the same year (1715) they marched to attack the Earl of Sutherland, who however declined an engagement and retired to Bonar, where his force dispersed. Soon after this the Chevalier appeared amongst his adherents at Perth, but lost heart at seeing the paucity of their numbers. and advising them to seek safety by retreating northwards in a body under General Gordon (which they did in admirable order), fled himself to France on February 4th, 1716, and the Rebellion was at an end. The chief of MacKinnon was attainted for the part he took in the rebellion, but received a pardon on January 4th, 1727. [21]



1716

Valentine Crawford married Honora Grimes in 1716 in Virginia.[22]



Mary Crawford born. (She marries John Munn.)[23]

MARY24 CRAWFORD (VALENTINE23, WILLIAM22, MAJOR GENERAL LAWRENCE21, HUGH20, HUGH19, CAPTAIN THOMAS18, LAWRENCE17, ROBERT16, MALCOLM15, MALCOLM14, ROGER13, REGINALD12, JOHN, JOHN, REGINALD DE CRAWFORD, HUGH OR JOHN, GALFRIDUS, JOHN, REGINALD5, REGINALD4, DOMINCUS3 CRAWFORD, REGINALD2, ALAN1) was born Abt. 1716 in Westmoreland County, Virginia. She married JOHN MUNN.

Children of MARY CRAWFORD and JOHN MUNN are:
43. i. CAPTAIN JAMES25 MUNN, b. October 26, 1755, Pennsylvania; d. March 11, 1839, Sciota County, Ohio.
ii. MARY MUNN, b. April 01, 1761; m. (1) SOLOMON FREMAN; m. (2) WILLIAM BYERS.

Notes for WILLIAM BYERS:
Served under his brother-in-law Captain James Munn, in the expedition against the Sandusky Indians.

iii. JOSIAH MUNN, b. January 13, 1759.
iv. JOHN MUNN, b. January 21, 1763.
v. DAVIS MUNN, b. September 30, 1765.
vi. HANNAH MUNN. [24]

1716

(1716) "The Rector acquainting the Visitors and Governors that upon Mr. Jackson’s declining to teach the Indian children that he had appointed Mr. Christopher Smith (9th greatgranduncle) to succeed him in employment and that sd Christopher Smith is hereby approved of as a Master to that sd Indian *** and ordered that he have the same allowance of Sallary that was given to Mr. Jackson.” Mr Jackson was Christopher Jackson. Christopher was probably a teacher before that time. Mr Jackson was paid 50 pounds sterling. The grammer school also educated white children from Williamsburg.(May 6, 1716) On the petition of Christopher Smith, Master to the Indian Children Ord. that, on consideration that there are but few of them now at school, he be allowed 25 pounds per annum, that he have pasturage for his horse, firewood for his chamber and the liberty of teaching such English children as shall be put to him and that a partition be erected at the charge of the College to separate the said English children from the Indians. Masters and Visitors of the College of William and Mary. William and Mary Quarterly, v. 7, page. 235. Williamsburg students paid 20 shillings per annum to attend school.



Christopher's death is commonly given as 1716. William & Mary records indicate that he was not replaced as Indian Master until sometime in 1720 when Reverend Charles Griffin was hired. [25]

The Indian School at William & Mary

There might not have been an Indian School at the College of William & Mary had it had not been for a provision in the will of Sir Robert Boyle, the famous English scientist who died in 1691, two years before the College was chartered.

In his will, Boyle provided that £4,000 sterling should be employed for "pious and charitable uses." Boyle's executors decided to use the funds to purchase Brafferton Manor in Yorkshire, England, and they designated part of the rents paid by the manor's tenants to be given annually to support the Indian School at William & Mary, while another part would go to the Indian School at Harvard College in Massachusetts.

It was most likely in response to the Boyle bequest that language was added to the Royal Charter to list as one of the College’s missions "that the Christian faith may be propagated amongst the Western Indians, to the glory of Almighty God...." In return for annual payments from Boyle's executors, the College would keep "soe many Indian children in Sicknesse and health, in Meat, drink, Washing, Lodgeing, Cloathes, Medicine, books and Education from the first beginning of Letters till they are ready to receive Orders and be thought Sufficient to be sent abroad to preach and Convert the Indians."

Royal Governor Francis Nicholson (1698–1705) enthusiastically anticipated that if "any great [Indian] nation will send 3 or 4 of their children thither" they could be trained in British ways and then "sent back to teach the same things to their own people."

In the beginning, classes were held in temporary quarters and later in the Wren Building; the boys lived with families in town until the Brafferton - funded by the Boyle estate - was constructed in 1723. The school continued, frequently with just a handful of students, until the Boyle funds were discontinued at the time of the American Revolution.

The Virginia colonists tried several strategies for recruiting Indian boys. Governor Nicholson instructed colonists who traded with Indian tribes to look for suitable Indian students. Later, Virginia officials negotiating treaties with Indian tribes such as the Tuscarora, Chickahominy, and Catawba tried to convince the native leaders to send boys to the school. Students came from both local "tributary" tribes—such as the Pamunkey, Chickahominy, and Nansemond who lived fairly close to Williamsburg and paid tribute to the colony—and more distant tribes, including the Catawba in North Carolina, the Cherokee in the southern Appalachian mountains, and the Delaware and Wyandot of the Ohio River Valley. Enrollment reached a height of twenty-four students in 1712, but declined to eight in 1754 and stayed at about that level until the school closed.

Some Native American groups sent their sons to be educated in Williamsburg because they wanted to maintain good relations with the colony. Through the deerskin trade, the English colonists provided them with weapons, cloth, and other goods and materials that the Indians could not make themselves. The Indians wanted envoys who could speak English and understand the colonists' culture. Initially, many of the students at William & Mary’s Indian School were purchased from frontier traders, or sent to Williamsburg as diplomatic hostages to ensure peace with potentially hostile tribes.

The Indian Master was frequently a man who had been educated at William & Mary; several had previously been ushers—or assistants to the master—in the College's classical grammar school. While many of the Indian Masters saw their job only as a stepping stone to greater things, such as a position as minister in a local church, some, such as Emmanuel Jones, held the post for many years. The Indian Master lived with the boys at the Indian School and was permitted to take in white students whom he tutored for a fee.

The Indian School at William & Mary cannot be counted a success by the standards of the Englishman. It failed in the goal of Anglicizing and Christianizing the native populace. As soon as the Indian students left the school, the colonists complained, they abandoned the behaviors they learned at the Brafferton and resumed Indian ways of life. Worse yet, from the colonists' point of view, some Indians used their knowledge of English not to help the Virginians but to defend their tribes' cultures and well-being.

From the Indian perspective, the school may be seen as somewhat more successful. To be sure, many students never returned to their tribes, and a strange diet as well as exposure to European diseases for which they had no immunity sickened and killed several students, especially in the school's early years. But the school's alumni also proved to be invaluable to their native communities. John Nettles, for example, helped his tribe in North Carolina by reading the treaties that the British wrote, and by serving as an interpreter between the Catawba and the British. In the end, the Indian School had the opposite effect to the one intended. Instead of convincing Indians to become good Englishmen, it allowed the Indians to learn enough about British culture to defend their old ways of life.[26]

1716: Mary Vance was born in 1716, the d/o Andrew Vance Jr. b 1695, and Mary "Cook" Vance.[27]

1716: In South Carolina after 1716, only Christians could vote in the colony. Maryland and North Carolina barred Jews from the legal profession. [28]


1716


The Viceroy of New Spain, the Marqués de Valero, authorizes the relocation of the Mission of San Francisco Solano from the Rio Grande to the San Antonio River.[29]




Wednesday October 9, 1754

Major General Edward Braddock is ordered back to England from Italy to receive his orders regarding the forthcoming expedition to America. This expedition's goal is to remove the French from the Ohio river valley and hopefully the rest of Canada. [30]



October 9, 1765: Colonists adopt the Declaration of Rights and Grievances in response to the Stamp Act.[31]

October 9, 1770: GW Went from Col. Cresaps to Romney[32] where in the afternoon the Doctr. & my Servant & Baggage arrivd.

October 9th, 1770: GW Went up to Romney in order to buy work horses, and with Dr. Craik and my baggage, arrived there about twelve o’clock



.


http://haygenealogy.com/hay/patriots/boone-mingo.jpg


Daniel Boone and a Mingo Indian (re-enactment; not a period photograph)


October 9, 1773: A then-obscure hunter named Daniel Boone led a group of about 50 emigrants in the first attempt by British colonists to establish a settlement in Kentucky County,VA (KY). On October 9, 1773, Boone's oldest son James and a small group of men and boys who were retrieving supplies were attacked by a band of Delawares, Shawnees, and Cherokees. They had decided "to send a message of their opposition to settlement." James Boone and another boy were captured and tortured to death. The brutality of the killings shocked the settlers along the frontier, and Boone's party abandoned their expedition. The deaths among Boone's party were among the first events in Dunmore's War. For the next several years, Indian nations opposed to the treaty continued to attack settlers, ritually mutilated and tortured to death the surviving men, and took the women and children into slavery.

History, always written by the victors, is not unbiased. While many accounts of the Lord Dunmore's War downplay it, there were plenty of hostilities of the Whites against the Indians.



October 9, 1774: A dispatch was received from Dunmore saying that he (Dunmore) was at the mouth of the Hocking, and that he would proceed thence directly to the Shawanese towns on the Scioto, instead of coming down the Ohio to the mouth of the Kanawha as at first agreed on. At the same time he ordered Lewis to cross the Ohio and march to meet him (Dunmore) before the Indian towns. [33]

October 9, 1774

On October 9 Dunmore sent a dispatch announcing his plans to proceed to the Shawnee towns on the Scioto. He ordered Lewis to cross the Ohio and meet him at the Shawnee towns. [34]…Lord Dunmore and his army, in more than 100 canoes, piroques and a few large keelboats, had just landed at the mouth of the Hockhocking and made camp, with orders for the march to begin first thing in the morning. Dunmore then inspected the small fort that had been built by Capt. Crawford and approved of the good job that had been done. He named the place Fort Gower and promoted William Crawford to the rank of major.[35]

Monday, October 9th, 1775: On my way to Major Crawford’s saw the vestiges of an old fortification. It appears to me that this country has been inhabited by a race of people superior in military knowledge to the present Indians. In different parts of the country there are the vestiges of regular fortifications, and it is well known the Indians have not the least knowledge of that art. When, or by whom, these places were built. I leave to more able antiquarians than I am to determine. Fortunately for me Zachariah Connel is going over the Mountain tomorrow and will find me a horse to go along with him. Returned to V. Crawford’s.[36]

Archaeologists say that people were living here for about 12,000 years before Europeans arrived on the scene.(This coincides with the ending of the last ice age.) From 900 A.D. to about 1650, the area was inhabited by what are known now as the Monongahela People. They lived in stockaded villages of a couple of dozen houses. They farmed, growing corn, beans and squash along the floodplains and terraces of major rivers. They left in a cloud of mystery; none still lived here when the Europeans came over the mountains. No Native American sites are accessible to the general public, but Ancient habitations have been identified along the trail at Cumberland, Meyersdale, Fort Hill, Confluence, Connellsville, the Sewickley Creek area and McKeesport. The Indians that moved here after the Monongahelas were refugees from the east: the Delawares (Lenape), the Shawnee and later the Iroquois. These were the people encountered by the first French and English traders who came down the rivers and over the mountains.[37]



October 9, 1777: Washington had sent Greene (Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Greene, 1st Rhode Island Regiment) to Red Bank, and wrote him on October 9: “The post with which you are entrusted is of the utmost importance to America. . . . The whole defense of the Delaware absolutely depends upon it; and consequently all the enemy’s hopes of keeping Philadelphia and finally succeeding in the object of the present campaign” (Heston, South Jersey, I, 165).

October 9, 1781

American and French forces begin shelling the surrounded British forces under General Cornwallis at Yorktown, Virginia.[38]

October 9, 1824


Saturday, October 9, 1824.
Spencer County, IN.




[Thomas Lincoln is put on Pigeon Baptist Church discipline committee to visit man and wife who had separated.Pigeon Church Record.]


[39]

October 9, 1825:


11

602

Harrison, Carter H. (Carter Henry), 1796-1825 (will and related documents), October 9, 1825 [40]

October 9, 1843: Richard R Cabell b. March 9, 1822; d. October 9, 1843, unmarried. [41]



October 9, 1862: Capture of Galveston, TX.[42]



Sun. October 9[43], 1864

No move today on picket until 4 pm got

Mail and rations fight in rear with

Cavalry

Gen Torbeat[44] catured 47 teams 9 ambulances 11 canon and 300 prisoners

Big frost at night

(William Harrison Goodlove Civil War Diary)[45]



October 9, 1899:




18

867

McKinley, William, 1843-1901, Dinner, October 9, 1899



[46]

October 9, 1939: Himmler declared that 550,000 Jews living in Polish provinces should be relocated.[47]



October 9, 1941: Hans Frank told the ministers of the General Government in Cracow, “As far as Jews are concerned…I want to tell you quite frankly that they must be done away with one way or another.[48]



October 9, 1941 : The Nazi-allied government leb by Marshl Ion Antonescu began deporting Jews to camps located in Transnistria, an occupied area in the former Soviet Union.[49]



June 20-October 9, 1942 : From Vienna, 13,776 Jews are deported to Theresienstadt.[50]



October 9, 1942: Anne Frank, hidden with her family in an Amsterdam warehouse, wrote in her diary, “The British radio speaks of the (the Jews) being gassed.”[51]



October 9, 1942: In Brussels, Belgium, five of six leading members of the “Belgian Jewish COMMUNIty are released for incarceration following the intervention of Cardinal Joseph-Ernst van Roey and Belgium’s Queen Elizabeth.[52]



October 9, 1942: Thousands of Jews from Miedzyrzec, Poland, are deported to the Treblinka death camp.[53]



October 9, 1942: The Italian racial laws are enforced in Libya.[54]



October 9, 1944: The SS arrests three Jewish women at the Auschwitz munitions factory for complicity in the smuggling of explosives used in the uprising of October 6-7.



October 9, 1944: At Birkenau, on Simshat Topah, 650 boys involved with the Birkenau revolt were locked in the barracks together. Most of them would be tortured and then killed on October 20.[55]



October 9, 1945: After his trial in Paris, Pierre Laval, head of the Vichy Government is executed by firing squad. General Petain was the titular head of the Vichy Government. Laval really ran the show. Vichy was the name of the French collaborationist government thaqt worked with the Nazis during World War II. Vich’s supporters included France’s own, home-grown anti-Semites. The Vichy government was so eager to integrate itself with the New German Order, that it was rounding up Jews and turning them over to the Nazis before the Nazis asked them to do so.[56]



October 9, 1962 David Ferrie calls a number at the Republic National Bank Bldg.

in Dallas listed to John O’Connor (as well as Dresser Industries).

J. Edgar Hoover is in Las Vegas, Nevada, to address the American Legion national

convention. Lee Harvey Oswald abruptly quits his job at the welding company. He gives no

notice and even fails to remain on the premises long enough to collect his final paycheck. He has

it mailed to him later. He also rents a P.O. box in Dallas. It is to this P.O. box that the rifle will be

mailed. Oswald will use a post-office box wherever he goes from now on. [57]



October 9, 1963 Lee Harvey Oswald opens a post office box (#2915) at the Dallas

General Post Office.

Jack Ruby flies to New Orleans on American Airlines Flight 985. AOT[58]

October 9, 1978: Rioting in the cities of Amol and Babol on the Caspian Sea cost the lives of three individuals.[59]

October 9, 2009



I get email!


From Jane Kenny,
When we went to Ireland Trinity College had an exhibit of Napoleon. They had many tapestries showing Napoleon and his body guards. The boys and I had fun trying to figure out which one was our g.g.g.g.g.g.g.g…..grandfather J

Joseph LeClere, our 5th great grandfather was one of Napoleans bodyguards. His family would move to Dubuque, Iowa. My guess is that the good looking one is our relative.

“In November 1799 Napoleon was in Paris leading the coup d’etat from which he became Consul. Christmas 1799 he became 1st Consul.
As for his bodyguard, there was his personal one “the Guides a cheval”, [Company of mounted guides] formed in May 1796 following a raid by Austrian Hussars at [disputed depends what you read] from which he only just evaded capture.
Once he became 1st Consul he merged the Guides with the Gard du Directoire [Guard of the Directory] and others to become a single unit consisting of infantry and cavalry the Gards des Consuls [Guard of the Consulates] that would later became the foundation of the Imperial Guard. Following the merger the Guides were renamed as the Escadron de Chasseurs-a-Cheval de La Gard Consulair [Company of light cavalrymen of the Consular Guard] then later the Chasseurs a Cheval de la Garde Imperiale [light cavalrymen of Imperial Guard], one of several cavalry units of the Imperial Guard. Early in 1800 Napoleon started his Italian campaign and the Gardes des Consuls would be involved [infantry and cavalry] in the Battle of Marengo(June 14, 1800) from which the Guard became famous and it appears it was the renamed “the Guides a cheval” company that was present during the battle and led one of the final cavalry charges that contributed so much to Napolean’s victory.”[60]





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[1] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1558


[2] http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt


[3] http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt




[4] http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt


[5] http://archive.org/stream/lettersofmarystu00mary/lettersofmarystu00mary_djvu.txt


[6] Wonders of the World, Children of the Stars. 7/27/2011


[7] This Day in Jewish History


[8] Harrisonj


[9] Harrisonj


[10] * Essex County, Virginia Records, Deed Book No. 13, 1707-11, p. 365. Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg 316


[11] http://www.twoop.com/medicine/archives/2005/10/bubonic_plague.html


[12] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/e/r/Irene-Deroche/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0585.html


[13] http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/e/r/Irene-Deroche/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0585.html


[14] http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cutlip/database/America.html


[15] From: Andre Goodfriend
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2008 9:37 PM


[16]www.wikipedial.org


[17] http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/ViewStory.aspx?tid=160989&pid=-2117088505&did=95de0a0b-7819-4acd-a735-ec83f3fad370&src=search


[18] Timeline of Cherokee Removal.


[19] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_MacKinnon


[20] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888


[21] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888


[22] http://www.homestead.com/AlanCole/CrawfordRootsII.html


[23] The Brothers Crawford, Allen W. Scholl, 1995


[24] http://penningtons.tripod.com/jeptha.htm


[25] http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/ViewStory.aspx?tid=160989&pid=-2117088505&did=95de0a0b-7819-4acd-a735-ec83f3fad370&src=search


[26] http://www.wm.edu/about/history/historiccampus/indianschool/index.php


[27] http://timothyv.tripod.com/index-338.html


[28] hhttp://www.drtl.org/Research/AlamoChronology.aspttp://www.acjna.org/acjna/articles_detail.aspx?id=319


[29]


[30] http://www.nps.gov/archive/fone/1754.htm


[31] On This Day in America by John Wagman.


[32] The town of Romney on the South Branch of the Potomac River was established in 1762 (Hening, 7:598—600).


[33] The following transcription was submitted by Gaylene Kerr of Houtson, TX for inclusion at the Genealogy in Washington in May 1999. Bibliographic Information:

History of Washington County, Pennsylvania With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Pioneers and Prominent Men, Boyd Crumrine, L. H. Everts & Co. (Philadelphia, 1882), Chapter VI., pp. 66–74.


[34] http://haygenealogy.com/hay/patriots/dunmore.html


[35] That Dark and Bloody River, Allan W. Eckert




[36] The Journal of Nicholas Cresswell, 1774-1777 pg. 123


[37] http://www.atatrail.org/about/page6.cfm


[38] On This Day in America by John Wagman.


[39] http://www.thelincolnlog.org/Calendar.aspx?date=1824-10-09


[40]


Series 4: Harrison Family Correspondence and Miscellaneous Documents, 1637-1954, bulk 1800-1911


This series is primarily made up of letters to and from persons who appear to have been ancestors of Harrison, although there are also a few items (such as a will, letters of introduction, seventeenth and eighteenth century land deeds, and documents concerning military or political appointments), that are not correspondence but which have been included in this series because they relate to Harrison's ancestors. The series also includes: (a) a letter sent to Caroline Owsley from Belle Harvey regarding the Grasshopper Club and other social activities of Harrison's mother, Sophonisba Preston Harrison; (b) three letters sent to William Preston Harrison, Harrison's brother (a response from Rutherford B. Hayes to Preston's request for an autograph, a condolence letter following Harrison's father's assassination, and a thank you note for a complimentary subscription to the Chicago Times); (c) two letters sent by Harrison's son, Carter H. Harrison V, to Russell MacFall following Harrison's death; (d) seventy letters from Ella Lewis to Lucy Brady Cook, Harrison's daughter-in-law; and (e) a letter from James Madison to Robert H. Grayson.


The letters to and from Harrison's ancestors cover a variety of topics, both business and personal, but seem to have been collected by Harrison because they were written by, or sent to, family members, rather than because he was particularly interested in their subject matter. Only a very few of the items in this series contain explanatory annotations by Harrison. Correspondence relating specifically to the genealogy and history of the Harrison Family is gathered in Series 11 (Harrison Family History). Correspondence to or from Harrison's father, Carter H. Harrison III, or Harrison's wife, Edith Ogden Harrison, is arranged separately as well in Series 16-17, and Series 14-15, respectively.


The correspondence in this series is arranged alphabetically by the sender's name. Multiple items within a folder are then arranged chronologically. Documents other than correspondence are arranged alphabetically by the name of the person to whom the document primarily relates.





[41] The McKenney-Hall Portrait Gallery of American Indians by James D. Horan page 324.


[42]State Capital Memorial, Austin, TX, February 11, 2012




[43]October 9, 1864:Tom’s Brook, VA, Fisher’s Hill, VA or Strasburg, VA

U.S.A.- 9 Killed, 67 Wounded

C.S.A. 100 Killed and Wounded

180 Missing or Captured

(Civil War Battles of 1864), http://users.aol.com/dlharvey/1864bat.htm




[44] During Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan's Valley Campaigns of 1864, Torbert commanded the Cavalry Corps of the Army of the Shenandoah and was promoted to brevet major general on September 9, 1864. He received brevet promotions in the regular army for his service at Gettysburg, Haw's Shop, Winchester, and Cedar Creek. Torbert commanded the vestigial Army of the Shenandoah from April 22, 1865, to June 27, 1865. Wesley Merritt commanded Torbert's former corps under Sheridan in the last campaigns of the Civil War in Virginia.




[45] Annotated by Jeffery Leee Goodlove


[46]


Series 10: Printed Invitations and Souvenirs, 1883-1952


This series primarily consists of printed invitations, menus, and other souvenirs that Harrison collected as mementos of various dinners, receptions, and other functions that he attended. In addition, this series also includes various political mementos, including a humorous excursion ticket that mentions Carter H. Harrison III, and admission tickets to political conventions. Catalogues from exhibitions where items from Harrison's art collection were shown, or in which he otherwise had a special interest, as well as a set of club by-laws from Les Rosettes et Rubans de France, are also arranged in this series. A few of the items contain handwritten notes by Harrison that provide some background information about the event to which the item in question pertains.


The items in this series are arranged alphabetically by the name of the person, place or event to which they relate.





[47] This Day in Jewish History


[48]This Day in Jewish History


• [49] This Day in Jewish History.


[50] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1771.


[51] This Day in Jewish History


[52] This Day in Jewish History


[53] This Day in Jewish History.


[54] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1774




[55] This Day in Jewish History.




[56] This Day in Jewish History.


• [57] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf




[58] http://www.dallasnews.com/news/jfk50/reflect/20131012-extremists-in-dallas-created-volatile-atmosphere-before-jfks-1963-visit.ece


[59] Jimmy Carter, The Liberal Left and World Chaos by Mike Evans, page 502


[60] Bill LeClere, Genforum.genialogy.com/napoleonicw…

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